McLynnerd Bond, Jr. v. State of Indiana , 9 N.E.3d 134 ( 2014 )


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  • ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT                              ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
    Thomas W. Vanes                                      Gregory F. Zoeller
    Merrillville, Indiana                                Attorney General of Indiana
    Mark A. Bates                                        Ian A.T. McLean
    Crown Point, Indiana                                 Deputy Attorney General
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    In the
    Indiana Supreme Court                                      May 13 2014, 10:09 am
    No. 45S03-1309-CR-597
    MCLYNNERD BOND, JR.,
    Appellant (Defendant below),
    v.
    STATE OF INDIANA,
    Appellee (Plaintiff below).
    Appeal from the Lake Superior Court, No. 45G03-1102-MR-2
    The Honorable Diane Ross Boswell, Judge
    On Petition to Transfer from the Indiana Court of Appeals, No. 45A03-1205-CR-212
    May 13, 2014
    David, Justice.
    Let us all hope that the dark clouds of racial prejudice will soon
    pass away and the deep fog of misunderstanding will be lifted from
    our fear drenched communities . . . .
    Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Letter from Birmingham Jail (April 16, 1963). Dr. King’s letter
    expressed, in measured optimism, a desire to see a country free of racial discrimination. Writing
    while in jail for protesting racism and segregation in Birmingham, Alabama, he also noted the
    “interrelatedness” of instances of racial inequity. “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice
    everywhere,” he said. “Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly.” It is in service to
    this truth that we approach our opinion today.
    In this case, a police detective interrogated an African-American murder suspect. We
    have long held that law enforcement officers conducting interrogations may use a range of tactics
    and techniques to persuade suspects to provide incriminating statements. And we understand
    that simple question-and-answer methods will not always be successful. But the flexibility
    afforded to law enforcement is still bound by state and federal constitutional protections.
    Over the course of several hours the detective here employed a number of interrogation
    techniques to convince the suspect to admit his guilt. Most of these techniques were acceptable.
    But when he implied that the suspect’s race precluded him from receiving a fair trial and an
    impartial jury, he went too far.
    Facts and Procedural History
    A detective from the Gary Police Department was investigating a cold case murder from
    2007. During the course of an unrelated investigation in 2009, he received a tip that McLynnerd
    Bond, Jr. was responsible for the 2007 murder. On February 12, 2011, the detective learned that
    Bond was in custody at the Gary Police Department on outstanding county warrants. He brought
    Bond into an interrogation room to question him about the 2007 murder.
    2
    The detective read Bond his Miranda rights, which Bond waived. 1 For three hours, Bond
    consistently and adamantly denied being involved in the murder. The detective’s interrogation
    approach was to convince Bond that the police knew he was guilty and the only thing Bond
    could do to mitigate this was to admit guilt. The detective implied he could help Bond achieve a
    better outcome if he confessed—hinted that he might get a lesser-included charge than murder—
    and that Bond could see his children and talk to his mother if he cooperated. And a little over
    two hours into the interrogation, the detective told Bond, who is African American,
    [d]on’t let twelve people who are from Schererville, Crown
    Point—white people, Hispanic people, other people that aren’t
    from Gary, from your part of the hood—judge you. Because
    they’re not gonna put people on there who are from your neck of
    the woods. You know that. They’re not gonna be the ones to
    decide what happens to you. You know that. I know that.
    Everybody knows that. All they’re gonna see is, oh, look at this,
    another young motherf***** who didn’t give a f***.
    (Appellee’s Ex. 1.) After three hours, most of which was spent tucked into a corner of the
    interrogation room with the detective almost directly in his face, Bond broke. He told the
    detective that he committed the 2007 murder.
    On February 25, 2011, the State charged Bond with murder. He filed a motion to
    suppress his statement, claiming that it was involuntarily given in violation of the Fifth
    Amendment to the U.S. Constitution and Article 1, § 14 of the Indiana Constitution. After a
    two-day hearing in which the detective and Bond both testified, the trial court denied Bond’s
    motion. It noted, however, that “[t]he suggestion by the detective that the defendant could not
    receive a fair and impartial jury due to the location of the Courthouse causes great concern to the
    1
    Bond’s interrogation was videotaped, and the State tendered copies of the complete interrogation tape.
    It is now part of the record on appeal.
    3
    Court, and is strongly discouraged.” (App. at 6.) Bond sought an interlocutory appeal and the
    Court of Appeals accepted jurisdiction.
    The Court of Appeals affirmed in an unpublished memorandum decision. Bond v. State,
    No. 45A03-1205-CR-212, 
    2013 WL 2404071
    at *6 (Ind. Ct. App. May 31, 2013). The majority
    of the panel—like the trial court judge—“d[id] not approve of the comment” made by the
    detective and considered it “inappropriate,” but found that in viewing the interrogation in its
    entirety, it did not appear that the comment brought about Bond’s confession. 
    Id. at *4–5.
    Judge
    Kirsch dissented and would have reversed the denial of Bond’s motion to suppress because of
    the detective’s comment. 
    Id. at *6
    (Kirsch, J., dissenting).           We granted transfer, thereby
    vacating the Court of Appeals decision. Bond v. State, 
    993 N.E.2d 1149
    (Ind. 2013) (table); Ind.
    Appellate Rule 58(A).
    Standard of Review
    When a defendant challenges the voluntariness of his or her confession under the U.S.
    Constitution, the State must prove the statement was voluntarily given by a preponderance of the
    evidence. 2 Pruitt v. State, 
    834 N.E.2d 90
    , 114 (Ind. 2005). We examine the totality of the
    circumstances as presented by the record, and are guided by several factors including police
    coercion; the length, location, and continuity of the interrogation; and the defendant’s maturity,
    education, physical condition, and mental health. Miller v. State, 
    770 N.E.2d 763
    , 767–68 (Ind.
    2002). “The critical inquiry is whether the defendant’s statements were induced by violence,
    2
    Though Bond premised his motion on both the U.S. and Indiana Constitutions, he does not articulate a
    distinct argument for his state claim, which would have required the State to meet the higher hurdle of
    proving voluntariness beyond a reasonable doubt. See Pruitt v. State, 
    834 N.E.2d 90
    , 114–15 (Ind. 2005).
    4
    threats, promises or other improper influence.” Ringo v. State, 
    736 N.E.2d 1209
    , 1212–13 (Ind.
    2000).
    Discussion
    [T]he Fourteenth Amendment forbids the use of involuntary
    confessions not only because of the probable unreliability of
    confessions that are obtained in a manner deemed coercive, but
    also because of the “strongly felt attitude of our society that
    important human values are sacrificed where an agency of the
    government, in the course of securing a conviction, wrings a
    confession out of an accused against his will.”
    Jackson v. Denno, 
    378 U.S. 368
    , 385–86 (1964) (quoting Blackburn v. Alabama, 
    361 U.S. 199
    ,
    206–07 (1960)). Additionally, there is a “deep-rooted feeling that the police must obey the law
    while enforcing the law; that in the end life and liberty can be as much endangered from illegal
    methods used to convict those thought to be criminals as from the actual criminals themselves.”
    
    Id. at 386
    (quoting Spano v. New York, 
    360 U.S. 315
    , 320–21 (1959)).
    We agree with the Court of Appeals that the detective’s statements implying that a
    confession would aid Bond’s case did not themselves render that confession involuntary. Bond,
    
    2013 WL 2404071
    at *4. On several occasions, the detective reinforced to Bond that he could
    not guarantee a particular outcome or make any specific promise of a result, but he wanted Bond
    to know that cooperation could be a factor in his case and could influence the detective to be
    supportive as the case progressed. This is neither a coercive police tactic nor an unexpected one,
    and we do not view it as having overcome Bond’s free will.
    We likewise agree that the detective’s promises to put Bond in contact with his family if
    he confessed did not render that confession involuntary. See 
    id. at *5.
    The detective did not
    threaten Bond’s family with physical harm or legal jeopardy. And, in fact, he followed through
    5
    with his promises and Bond was able to speak with his girlfriend and mother and see his
    children.
    But with respect to the detective’s statement that Bond might not receive a fair trial
    because of his race and the likely composition of a prospective jury, our sentiment goes beyond
    the trial court’s “great concern” and the Court of Appeals majority’s disapproval of it as being
    “inappropriate.” This is not a police tactic that we simply “do not condone” because it is
    deceptive. Instead, this was an intentional misrepresentation of rights ensconced in the very
    fabric of our nation’s justice system—the rights to a fair trial and an impartial jury, and the right
    not to be judged by or for the color of your skin—carried out as leverage to convince a suspect in
    a criminal case that his only recourse was to forego his claim of innocence and confess. And like
    Judge Kirsch, we condemn it.
    This country has waged a long and difficult campaign aimed at ensuring equal access to
    justice for all its citizens—a campaign whose courtroom aspect has been perhaps marked most
    visibly by the efforts to ban racial discrimination in jury selection after the enactment of the
    Fourteenth Amendment. See, e.g., Strauder v. West Virginia, 
    100 U.S. 303
    , 308 (1879) (state
    statute excluding non-white citizens from juries “is practically a brand upon [those citizens],
    affixed by the law, an assertion of their inferiority, and a stimulant to that race prejudice which is
    an impediment to securing to individuals of the race that equal justice which the law aims to
    secure to all others”), abrogated on other grounds by Taylor v. Louisiana, 
    419 U.S. 522
    (1975);
    Thiel v. Southern Pac. Co., 
    328 U.S. 217
    , 227 (1946) (“the color of a man’s skin is unrelated to
    his fitness as a juror”); Batson v. Kentucky, 
    476 U.S. 79
    , 86 (1986) (“Purposeful racial
    discrimination in selection of the venire violates a defendant’s right to equal protection because it
    denies him the protection that a trial by jury is intended to secure.”) Such a police interrogation
    technique as we see here flies in the face of those efforts by implying that they were all for
    naught.
    And in a larger sense, purposeful racial discrimination in the justice system is a harm that
    extends to the community as a whole because it “undermine[s] public confidence in the fairness
    6
    of our system of justice.” 
    Id. at 87.
    Active discrimination by the State “condones violations of
    the United States Constitution within the very institution entrusted with its enforcement, and so
    invites cynicism respecting the jury’s neutrality and its obligation to adhere to the law.” Powers
    v. Ohio, 
    499 U.S. 400
    , 412 (1991). “Thus, racial discrimination has no place in the courtroom.”
    Addison v. State, 
    962 N.E.2d 1202
    , 1217 (Ind. 2012) (internal quotation omitted). As our own
    former Chief Justice once put it, one of the “ultimate objectives of our justice system” is to
    “create a system where all citizens are equal in the eyes of the law.” Randall T. Shepard,
    Elements of Modern Court Reform, 
    45 Ind. L
    . Rev. 897, 906 (2012). And “[f]or citizens to have
    confidence in the system, they must see people like themselves represented in it at all levels.” 
    Id. This of
    course includes the jury box.
    But despite nearly two hundred years of effort by civil rights activists, legislatures, law
    enforcement, courts, and others, the perception remains that racial discrimination still exists
    within our justice system: from police treatment to jury selection to jury verdicts and sentences.
    And the perception is especially common within the African-American community. 3 It defines
    reality for many African Americans faced with, serving in, or incarcerated by our criminal
    courts, and unquestionably has roots in our nation’s tortured history of race relations. That there
    remains such fear or mistrust of the justice system is why all courts must remain vigilant to
    eradicate any last vestiges of the days in which a person’s skin color defined their access to
    justice.
    3
    See, e.g., John Sides, White People Believe the Justice System is Color Blind. Black People Really
    Don’t, THE WASHINGTON POST, July 22, 2013,
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2013/07/22/white-people-believe-the-justice-
    system-is-color-blind-black-people-really-dont/ (normal range of group differences of opinion “pale in
    comparison to the gulf separating black and white perceptions of justice”). When faced with the
    statement “courts give all a fair trial,” about twenty-five percent of white respondents disagreed; more
    than sixty percent of African-American respondents disagreed. 
    Id. 7 But
    the detective’s comment instead intentionally played on the fear that Bond could not
    receive a fair trial because of his race. And in doing so, it gave truth to that fear. Whereas we so
    stridently seek to eliminate the perception that race plays a part in the access to justice, the
    detective strengthened it by grounding it in reality. He was either implying a return to days of
    overt racial discrimination or saying that we still live in those days. See, e.g., State v. Haynie,
    
    395 So. 2d 669
    , 675–76 (La. 1981) (sheriff told detained African-American suspect that “you are
    charged with raping a white woman, and you know a judge and jury won’t believe you here in
    Grant Parish,” and so suspect should confess as sign of cooperation). Neither is acceptable.
    It is true that Bond would not be entitled to a jury composed entirely of jurors of his own
    race, or even a jury racially composed in proportion with the racial breakdown of his community.
    
    Batson, 476 U.S. at 85
    ; Adams v. State, 
    431 N.E.2d 820
    , 822 (Ind. 1982); see also Akins v.
    Texas, 
    325 U.S. 398
    , 403 (1945). “The number of our races and nationalities stands in the way
    of evolution of such a conception of due process or equal protection.”               
    Id. But Bond
    is
    absolutely entitled under the U.S. Constitution “to require that those who are trusted with jury
    selection shall not pursue a course of conduct which results in discrimination in the selection of
    jurors on racial grounds.” Id.; see also Ind. Const. Art. 1, § 13(a). 4
    The detective knew this. It is not clear whether Bond did, but it is clear that he had no
    experience with the court system or jurors in Crown Point and he took the detective’s comment
    as true—and it made him believe he “was going to do the rest of [his] life in jail.” 5 (Tr. at 68–
    69.)
    4
    We emphasize that this is not a strict Batson case. There is no indication that a prosecutor actually
    would have tried to stack a jury against Bond based on race. But the evil Batson sought to remedy is the
    one that the detective invoked as leverage against Bond.
    5
    The Court of Appeals noted that Bond had been read his Miranda rights in support of its conclusion that,
    considering the totality of the circumstances, Bond’s confession was still voluntary in spite of the
    8
    So today we do not find ourselves reviewing a case in which an officer misled or
    deceived a suspect as to the evidence held against him, see Kahlenbeck v. State, 
    719 N.E.2d 1213
    (Ind. 1999), or one in which the police falsely claimed that the victim of a murder still
    lived, see Carter v. State, 
    490 N.E.2d 288
    (Ind. 1986), or one in which police had a good faith
    basis for making a technically false statement, see Ellis v. State, 
    707 N.E.2d 797
    (Ind. 1999).
    We have upheld the voluntariness of confessions despite the police deception in such cases.
    Instead, in this case Bond was intentionally deceived as to the fairness of the criminal
    justice system itself because of the color of his skin. Regardless of the evidence held against him
    or the circumstances of the alleged crime, he was left with the unequivocal impression that
    because he was African American he would spend the rest of his life in jail.                     Unless he
    confessed. And in unfortunate days gone by, this might have been the case. But no one wants to
    go back to such a time or place in the courtroom, and so we will not allow even the perception of
    such inequality to enter the interrogation room.
    We certainly do not believe that the detective is himself racist or harbors racist tendencies
    or beliefs. And this misconduct does not rise anywhere near to the terrible level seen in prior
    detective’s comment. Bond, 
    2013 WL 2404071
    at *5. But the Miranda warnings do not address a
    defendant’s right to a fair and impartial jury regardless of race. And we do not intend to suggest that they
    must, but “[t]he purpose underlying the Miranda warnings is to protect an individual’s Fifth Amendment
    privilege against self-incrimination by placing reasonable limitations on police interrogations,”
    Sauerheber v. State, 
    698 N.E.2d 796
    , 801–02 (Ind. 1998), and to effectuate that purpose they warn a
    suspect specifically as to those limitations. They are not a recitation of the full panoply of constitutional
    protections available to a suspect or criminal defendant at all stages of the trial process.
    So if an officer told a suspect in an interrogation that he could could say anything and it would
    not be used against him in a subsequent proceeding, we might give the prior Miranda warnings greater
    weight in considering the totality of the circumstances because those warnings specifically tell a
    defendant that his statements can be used against him. Here, though, Bond was told that he faced an
    unfair trial because of his race. Certainly he was warned that he did not have to speak to the detective at
    all, but nowhere was the misstatement countermanded by the language of the Miranda warnings. As such
    we do not give the presence of the Miranda warnings weight here.
    9
    race-based cases in this country.       See, e.g., Brown v. Mississippi, 
    297 U.S. 278
    (1936)
    (admissions excluded when African-American defendants were whipped until they confessed to
    murders). But as Judge Kirsch said, “each time courts allow such conduct, they implicitly
    sanction it and encourage the next police officer in the next interrogation to go a bit further, to be
    more offensive, more racist and more deceptive.” Bond, 
    2013 WL 2404071
    at *6.           We agree.
    As Dr. King did, we likewise “refuse to accept the view that mankind is so tragically
    bound to the starless midnight of racism.” Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Acceptance Speech at
    Nobel Peace Prize Ceremony (December 10, 1964). We simply cannot and will not risk this
    going further, and therefore draw a firm line today.
    Thus, in considering the totality of the circumstances surrounding Bond’s interrogation,
    despite the otherwise permissible conduct by the detective, and despite Bond’s apparent
    maturity, health, education, and the favorable conditions of the interrogation, this deception by
    the detective tips the scale to involuntariness. We cannot tacitly countenance the erosion of
    everything so many have worked so hard to achieve in the realm of racial equality in the justice
    system—and continue to work to achieve—by disapproving of the statement but finding Bond’s
    confession nevertheless admissible.
    Conclusion
    A police officer may engage in a number of tactics and techniques to induce a confession
    without rendering that confession involuntary. “Such questioning is undoubtedly an essential
    tool in effective law enforcement,” and “[t]he line between proper and permissible police
    conduct and techniques and methods offensive to due process is, at best, a difficult one to draw.”
    Haynes v. Washington, 
    373 U.S. 503
    , 515 (1963).             But today we hold that intentionally
    misleading a suspect as to his constitutionally guaranteed rights to a fair trial and an impartial
    jury, because of his race, sits squarely on the wrong side of that line.
    10
    The trial court below concluded that, despite its great concern, “there is no caselaw that
    the Court is aware of that holds that this type of persuasion renders the confession involuntary.”
    We clearly understand the trial court’s predicament. But now there is. We reverse the trial
    court’s denial of Bond’s motion to suppress and remand this case for further proceedings.
    Dickson, C.J., Rucker, Massa, and Rush, JJ., concur.
    11